Kim Possible coloring pages: 38+ free printable PDF designs featuring Kim Possible, Ron Stoppable, Rufus, Wade, Shego, Dr. Drakken, Jim and Tim, and Dr. Ann and James Possible from the Disney Channel animated series. Every page is available to download as a PDF or color directly in the browser, with no account or payment required.
Kim Possible is a Disney Channel animated series created by Bob Schooley and Mark McCorkle, running from June 7, 2002, to September 7, 2007. It follows Kim, a high school student who balances cheerleading and saving the world, alongside her best friend Ron Stoppable and his pet naked mole rat Rufus.
These pages suit Disney fans, action-adventure fans, older viewers who grew up with the show, and younger children discovering it now.
The coloring challenge that belongs only to this set: Kim and Ron are color opposites by design. Kim is red, black, and white; Ron is warm tan, khaki, and brown. On any page they share, that contrast is the anchor, and getting both palettes right is what makes the page feel like the show.
Quick Answer
Kim Possible coloring pages are a free set of 38+ printable PDFs and browser-based coloring sheets from the Disney Channel series, covering Team Possible, the villains, the Possible family, and action scenes.
Best for: Disney fans aged 6 and up, fans of the original series, and children interested in action-adventure coloring
Formats: printable PDF and online coloring
Popular pages: Kim action and fighting pages, Kim and Ron together, Shego, and the family portrait
Creative uses: a Team Possible display, a heroes vs. villains comparison, a Kim action poster, and a color contrast study
What’s Inside Kim Possible Coloring Pages
The set covers the full main cast in solo portraits, action poses, and group scenes.
Kim Possible
Kim appears in the largest share of the set, across solo portraits in both casual and action stances, fighting and mid-mission scenes, a grappling hook page, and group scenes with Ron, her family, and the villains. The range covers her in cheerleader mode and full mission gear.
Coloring Kim: Kim’s mission outfit is her most iconic look: a black crop top, dark olive cargo pants, and a red hairband that ties back her auburn hair. Her hair is a warm auburn-red, leaning toward orange-red rather than dark burgundy. Her mission outfit is essentially a three-color palette of black, dark olive, and the red of her hair tie. Keep the black crisp and the cargo pants a muted earthy green. On cheerleader pages, her uniform shifts to red and white with gold accents. Her skin tone is light, warm, and her eyes are green.
Ron Stoppable and Rufus
Ron appears across several pages in solo portraits, paired with Kim, and in a group scene with Dr. Drakken. Rufus, his naked mole rat companion, appears in two dedicated pages and alongside Ron.
Coloring Ron: Ron is Kim’s visual opposite by design. His signature look is a pale yellow-cream hoodie over a warm tan or brown shirt, with baggy olive-brown pants. Everything about his palette is softer and warmer than Kim’s. His hair is a light sandy brown. Keeping his palette warmer and less defined than Kim’s reinforces the visual dynamic the show built around them. On pages where both appear, Kim reads sharp, and Ron reads comfortable, which is exactly right.
Coloring Rufus: Rufus is a naked mole rat, which means he is pink-grey and hairless. His skin is a warm, slightly wrinkled pink with a grey undertone. His large teeth are pale yellow-white. He is small enough that his pages are among the simplest in the set, color-wise, but getting the unusual pink-grey skin tone right is the key detail.
Shego
Shego appears in two solo pages and one scene with Kim and Dr. Drakken. She is one of the most visually striking characters in the set.
Coloring Shego: Shego wears a black-and-green bodysuit, her signature color combination. The green is a vivid, slightly cool medium green, not too dark and not neon. Her black sections are solid and sharp. Her skin is pale, her hair is dark, and her eyes are a cool green, matching her suit. The contrast between her crisp black-and-green palette and Dr. Drakken’s blue skin makes their shared page visually complex. On solo pages, her green is the only vivid color in an otherwise monochrome scheme, which is exactly how the show designed her.
Dr. Drakken
Dr. Drakken appears in three pages: two solo portraits and one group scene with Ron and Rufus.
Coloring Dr. Drakken: Drakken’s most distinctive feature is his blue skin, caused by a laboratory accident. It is a medium, slightly cool blue, not too dark or too saturated. His outfit is a dark navy coat, and his hair is dark blue-black. The blue skin against dark navy clothing requires slightly different shades of blue to read correctly; the skin should be lighter and warmer than the clothing.
Team Possible and Family Pages
The group scenes include Kim, Ron, and Rufus fighting together; Kim with Wade; the Possible family (Dr. Ann and James); and Kim with her twin brothers Jim and Tim.
Coloring group pages: on the Team Possible action page, Kim’s red-black-white palette acts as the visual anchor. Ron and Rufus should be distinctly warmer. On the family page, Dr. Ann Possible has auburn hair matching Kim’s, and James Possible has lighter hair. The twins Jim and Tim match each other.
Action and Mission Pages
Several pages show Kim mid-mission: swinging on a rope, in battle, fighting, using a grappling hook, and posing as a crime stopper.
Coloring action pages: these pages have the most compositional energy in the set. Kim’s black mission outfit reads as a silhouette in busy scenes, which means the background color choices carry more weight than on portrait pages. A cool blue or dark grey background makes the black outfit pop. A warm orange-red background creates a more dramatic, high-stakes feeling.
Printable PDF and Online Kim Possible Coloring Pages
All pages are available as printable PDFs or in the online coloring tool. The action scenes reward printing for more precise control over the background color choices that define their mood.
What These Pages Do
Coloring Kim Possible gives children a type of character most coloring sets skip: someone who is always doing something. Every action page in this set asks for a real decision: how to shade a figure in motion, what background makes a fighting pose read as dramatic rather than flat, how to keep Kim’s sharp red-and-black palette from bleeding into Ron’s warmer, softer tones on shared pages. Those are not passive coloring choices. They build the hand-eye coordination and color judgment that carry into drawing and design later, but they arrive through a character that children already want to spend time with.
The AAP notes that creative activities featuring characters with confident, capable identities support the development of self-efficacy in children: the sense that they themselves can act and achieve. Coloring Kim in a fighting pose, rather than a passive one, carries that message in a hands-on way.
Art therapy practitioners note that characters who project capability and decisiveness tend to bring those same qualities into the coloring session, making children more likely to commit boldly to color choices rather than hesitating.
How to Color Kim Possible Coloring Pages Well
Kim and Ron’s color contrast is the show’s visual language-Red-black-white for Kim; warm tan-khaki-brown for Ron. On any page they share, making sure those two palettes read as clearly distinct keeps the image looking like the show. The moment Ron’s palette gets as sharp or cool as Kim’s, the dynamic flattens.
Shego’s green needs to be vivid but not neon. Her black-and-green is a high-contrast, sophisticated color combination. A neon green reads as cartoonish in the wrong way. A medium cool green, confident but not screaming, is the correct tone.
Dr. Drakken’s blue skin requires two blues. Skin and coat are both blue, but must read as different values. A lighter, slightly warmer blue for the skin; a darker, cooler navy for the clothing. If both are the same blue, he reads as a blue blob rather than a person wearing a coat.
On action pages, the background sets the mood. Kim’s black outfit is neutral and will work against almost any background. Cool backgrounds (blue, grey) feel controlled and professional. Warm backgrounds (orange, deep red) feel urgent and dramatic. The choice is yours, and both are correct.
5 Creative Craft Ideas with Kim Possible Coloring Pages
Color Contrast Study
Color a Kim solo page and a Ron solo page using their signature palettes. Mount them side by side with “Kim Possible: Red, Black, White” and “Ron Stoppable: Tan, Khaki, Brown” written below each.
A display that shows the intentional visual contrast the show built between its two leads. Takes about twenty minutes.
Team Possible Action Display
Color the Kim, Ron, and Rufus fighting group page and mount it on a dark background. Add “Team Possible” in block letters above.
The show’s core trio in their defining pose. Takes about twenty-five minutes.
Heroes vs. Villains Comparison
Color a Kim action page and the Shego page side by side. Mount them facing each other on a single piece of card.
The hero and her most formidable opponent have black-dominant palettes in direct contrast. Takes about twenty minutes.
Kim Action Poster
Color the Kim Possible Fighting or Kim Possible In Battle page as a standalone poster, treating the background as a deliberate design choice rather than an afterthought.
The action pages are the most dynamic in the set. Given space and a strong background color, they work as wall-worthy display pieces. Takes about fifteen minutes.
Family Portrait
Color the Kim Possible and Family page, keeping the auburn hair connection between Kim and Dr. Ann, and the matching color scheme between Jim and Tim.
A quieter page in a set dominated by action, and the one that shows the world Kim is protecting rather than the missions she runs. Takes about twenty minutes.
FAQ About Kim Possible Coloring Pages
Are these Kim Possible coloring pages free, and can I color them online?
Yes. Every page is free, with no account, email, or payment required. Download the PDF to print at home, or open it in the online coloring tool to color on screen.
What is Kim Possible?
Kim Possible is a Disney Channel animated action-comedy series created by Bob Schooley and Mark McCorkle. It aired from June 7, 2002, to September 7, 2007, running for four seasons and 87 episodes. Kim Possible was the longest-running Disney Channel Original Series at the time of its conclusion. The show follows Kim, a high school student who saves the world as a regular side activity while dealing with school, family, and friendships.
Who are the main characters?
Kim Possible, voiced by Christy Carlson Romano, is the protagonist. Ron Stoppable, voiced by Will Friedle, is her best friend and sidekick. Rufus is Ron’s naked mole rat. Wade, voiced by Tahj Mowry, is a ten-year-old computer genius who supports the team remotely. Dr. Drakken, voiced by John DiMaggio, and Shego, voiced by Nicole Sullivan, are the primary villains.
Who is Shego?
Shego is Dr. Drakken’s sidekick and Kim’s most dangerous adversary. She was originally a superheroine with her brothers as part of Team Go, gaining her green energy powers after being struck by a comet. She wears a black-and-green bodysuit and is widely considered the most competent character in the show. Her relationship with Drakken is defined by constant sarcasm and barely concealed impatience.
Why does Dr. Drakken have blue skin?
Dr. Drakken’s skin turned blue as a result of a laboratory accident early in his career. He was born Drew Theodore P. Lipsky and was once a college roommate of Kim’s father, James Possible, before his failed academic career led him toward supervillainy.
What is the Kimmunicator?
The Kimmunicator is a handheld communication device invented by Wade that Kim uses to receive mission briefings, contact Wade for support, and coordinate with Ron. It functions as both a communication tool and a gadget launcher throughout the series.
Are these official Kim Possible coloring pages?
No. These are fan-made coloring sheets for personal use and are not affiliated with, licensed by, or endorsed by Disney Channel, Walt Disney Television Animation, or any other rights holder of Kim Possible.
Is there a live-action Kim Possible?
Yes. A live-action television film premiered on Disney Channel on February 15, 2019, starring Sadie Stanley as Kim and Sean Giambrone as Ron. It received generally positive reviews for capturing the spirit of the original animated series.
Start Coloring
Download any page by clicking the design. No account, email, or payment is required. Pages print directly from the browser at full resolution or open in the online coloring tool for screen use. Share finished pages on Facebook or Pinterest using the share buttons at the top of each design page.
